Terra (LUNA) has plunged significantly after witnessing a FUD attack on its native stablecoin TerraUSD (UST).
The LUNA/USD pair dropped 20% between May 7 and May 8, hitting $61, its worst level in three months, after a whale mass-dumped $285 million worth of UST. As a result of this selloff, UST briefly lost its U.S. dollar peg, falling to as low as $0.98.
LUNA serves as a collateral asset to maintain UST's dollar peg, according to Terra's elastic monetary policy. Therefore, when the value of UST is above $1, the Terra protocol incentivizes users to burn LUNA and mint UST. Conversely, when UST's price drops below $1, the protocol rewards users for burning UST and minting LUNA.
Therefore, during UST supply reduction, LUNA's valuation should decrease. Similarly, when UST's supply expands, LUNA's valuation increases, notes Will Comyns, a researcher at Messari.
The chart below shows an ongoing downtrend in the daily UST supply, coinciding with a relative increase in daily LUNA supply. On May 8, UST's market underwent contraction for the first time in two months, dropping by 28.1 million below zero. Simultaneously, LUNA's supply expanded by over 436.75 million above zero.
The excessive daily supply against what appears to be a lowering or stable market demand may have pushed LUNA's price lower.
Terra's ongoing price decline prompted LUNA to retest a support confluence consisting of its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) near $56 and a multi-month upward sloping trendline.
Interestingly, the ascending trendline constitutes a rising wedge pattern in conjugation with another upward trending line above. Rising wedges are bearish reversal setups, so their occurrence on Terra's weekly chart suggests more downside
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